Let's hope global warming doesn't go to 11. Now thatclimatechange appears to be audible, that Spinal Tap-ianbenchmarkmay someday be the ultimategaugeof climatecatastrophe.

According to a new study, it's now possible to hear the rise of global warming in the form of more, larger, more intense storms—signs of climate change, many scientists say. Fordecades, seismologists have been filtering out the sounds of massive, storm-driven ocean waves crashing into coastlines. Thepeskynoise was getting in the way of earthquake detection.

But now some experts are electronically filtering out the quakes—and turning up the volume on the storm waves. The noise of waves crashingashorecreates very specific vibrations, according to study leader Peter Bromirski of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. And those vibrationsindicatehowseverestorms at sea actually are.

Bromirski and others are still studying seismological data on storms from the 1930s to the present and are waiting to release the full analysis to the public. But a trend is alreadyobvious, he said. "There is adefiniteincrease in severe storm events over the years that we are noticing at the recording stations." The world stage is very well set forfull - scaleeavesdroppingon open-ocean storm waves. Seismic recording stations have been monitoring the vibrations of the Earth worldwide since the 1930s in roughly the same way.

Thatconsistencymay bereassuringto scientists. For example, weather-satellite data have been used to identify evidence of a trend ofintensifyingstorms, but some scientists say satellite tech, having changed so much over the decades, is problematic for tracking storms in the long term. "The nice thing about these [quake] recording stations," Bromirski said, "is that they are such stable devices that so consistently measure the vibrations produced by storm activity."